Big and Small Countries

A great country is like the lowland toward which all streams flow. It is the Reservoir of all under heaven, the Feminine of the world. The Feminine always conquers the Masculine by her quietness, by lowering herself through her quietness.
Hence, if a great country can lower itself before a small country, it will win over the small country; and if a small country can lower itself before a great country, it will win over the great country.
The one wins by stooping; the other by remaining low.
What a great country wants is simply to embrace more people; and what a small country wants is simply to come to serve its patron.
Thus, each gets what it wants. But it behooves a great country to lower itself.

(Tao Teh King 61–Wu translation)

A great country is like the lowland toward which all streams flow. It is the Reservoir of all under heaven, the Feminine of the world. The Feminine always conquers the Masculine by her quietness, by lowering herself through her quietness.

“Great” does not just refer to size, but to the character of a major county. Such a country is receptive not aggressive, welcoming all outside influence that proves worthy, and willing to adopt (and adapt) that which is superior. This is very much a common trait of countries in the Far East. Therefore such countries continually advance in civilization and in richness of culture. They are able to be open to outside elements and yet able to maintain their distinctive character while assimilating and making them their own. Perhaps the most perfect example is Chinese Buddhism which is a evolutionary recreation of the Buddhism originally brought to China. Although some emperors regarded Buddhism as an alien religion they were greatly mistaken, for Chinese Buddhism is permeated with the genius of Chinese culture and could never be mistaken for a foreign religion.

The Divine Feminine prevails by the same kind of openness. She receives and recreates all things for their betterment. This is not passivity, but intense activity whose openness can be mistaken for weak acquiescence. But it is really a working of power. The Feminine does not play a “Yes, Dear,” role in relation to the Masculine. Rather, she transforms the Masculine by receiving it completely and evolving it into a form that is a development of its inherent qualities–qualities that would have lain dormant otherwise and thus the Masculine would never have been fully itself. The Feminine does not absorb, she receives, transmutes and gives a rebirth to all things. Thus she is the Mother of All.

Hence, if a great country can lower itself before a small country, it will win over the small country; and if a small country can lower itself before a great country, it will win over the great country.

“Lower itself” is not a very good translation, nor would “humble itself” be acceptable. Rather, Lao Tzu means a large country should exhibit positive condescension in the sense of respectful accommodation and regard for a smaller nation. It should be like a brother or even a father–more than a friend–which shares a common interest and outlook with the smaller country. Empires have been built in this way by the wise.

The one wins by stooping; the other by remaining low.

Mabry: “Therefore, by being humble, one gains. And the other, being humble already, also gains.”

Whether the larger assimilates the smaller or they remain separate, the larger assisting and even fostering the lesser which comes to depend on it, both are mutually benefited and both “win” by such an arrangement. Of course Lao Tzu is assuming that both are being honest and open with one another without underhanded or ulterior motives. I mention this because in its heyday the British Empire continually strove to extend itself by pretending to be of a fostering and protecting character to various nations. In fact, they liked using the word “protectorate” though eventual control and even domination was their purpose.

What a great country wants is simply to embrace more people; and what a small country wants is simply to come to serve its patron.

This is meant in a totally positive way, so it is not cynical as it might seem to us living in a morass of political fraud throughout the world.

Lao Tzu in no way opposes the desire of a country to extend its influence either through increasing its population or becoming a leader and trendsetter in a purely cultural sense. There is an empire of government and an empire of moral or cultural influence. No matter how the Soviet Union inveighed against the Decadent West and the United States in particular, on every level the politicians and the common citizens engaged in an almost desperate imitation of everything Western and especially American. Right in Moscow at the height of the Cold War there was a beauty shop called (in Russian) American Woman. I well remember seeing a special program about “youth” in the Soviet Union complete with interviews of teenagers (obviously privileged children of the leaders of the Communist Party) who had flip hairdos (the girls, that is) and were ham radio fans and demonstrated their skill in performing American popular music. There was even a time when a pair of blue jeans made in America could easily be sold in Russia for the equivalent of one hundred dollars. Even today America “rules” despite the continual sneering and outright hostility that is so chic among the envious in Europe and the Middle East.

And it is only good practical sense for smaller or less influential countries to desire the benefits of friendship with the powerful and affluent countries.

Thus, each gets what it wants. But it behooves a great country to lower itself.

Mabry: “Thus, both needs are satisfied And each gets what it wants. Remember, the great country should always humble itself.”

Byrn: “Both large and small countries benefit greatly from humility.”

If humility and sincere benevolence could dominate our “world scene” we would live in a very different and better world.

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Dedication of OCOY.org

This site is inspired by and dedicated to Paramhansa Yogananda, who introduced yoga meditation and the goal of self realization to the American people, and whose writings reveal the underlying unity of original Christianity and original Yoga.